Time Tracking For Productivity

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  • Time management is hard. Here are four strategies that work for me. Over the last two decades, the demands on my time have increased - in terms of both quantity and quality, keeping pace with my increased seniority at work and my growing family. Problems I am trying to address - Mind and body need systematic investment and longer time to recover - Success at work is no longer about doing my job well; I have to think for the future of the company, motivate smart colleagues - Older kids at home need more mind-share - and meaningful conversations; ditto with my spouse, managing finances, responsibilities and ageing parents To manage these challenges, I've developed routines: - Weekdays: I keep them simple and predictable so that there is no cognitive load on running a weekday. For instance, I don't spend time deciding what to eat for breakfast, where to order lunch, or what to cook for dinner. Similarly, I don't ponder over what time I'll leave or which mode of transport I'll use each day. I've set a repeatable pattern for Monday to Friday. - Weekends: I reserve fun for Saturday nights, keeping the rest of the week focused and free from mid-week parties that could disrupt my routine. It might sound boring, but it's effective in maintaining a balanced life. - Family Time: Creating routines with my family is essential. Evening walks with my spouse, watching a Netflix episode together daily, or cooking together on Sundays have become cherished bonding activities. - Driving Time: Sometimes I listen to podcasts, and other times I enjoy the silence, using this time to prepare for the day ahead or to unwind from it. However, it hasn't all been smooth sailing. Despite these strategies,challenges such as delegating tasks and managing external demands on my time continue. Constantly striving to find the right balance is an ongoing effort. In summary, while there's no perfect formula, these practices have helped me find a balance between my professional and personal life, adapting as I go. What are your strategies for managing your time? Would love to learn from you! #timemanagement #worklifebalance

  • View profile for Dave Crenshaw

    Author & Keynote Speaker on Productive Leadership | Over 10 Million Students Worldwide | Top LinkedIn Learning Course Instructor

    134,768 followers

    Your productivity has a rhythm... and no, it’s not “frantic all day.” Some hours you’re sharp and focused. Others? You’re rereading the same email five times and wondering where your last hour went. That’s not a time management failure—it’s a rhythm failure. ⏰ Your energy, attention, and interruptions don’t show up randomly. They follow patterns. The secret is learning to work with them instead of forcing your way through them. Here’s how to start identifying and aligning with your rhythm: • Personal Rhythm: Schedule your most valuable activities during the time of day when your energy peaks. • Work Rhythm: Look for patterns in your team’s or customers’ behavior and plan collaboration accordingly. • Interruption Frequency: Save low-focus tasks (like admin work or organizing files) for the most interruption-heavy times. • Interruption Type: Group similar tasks together to minimize the mental cost of constant switching. You don’t need to power through every minute of the day. You just need to align with your own rhythm. What’s your high-focus window—morning, mid-morning, or afternoon? #productivity #bestadvice #success #davecrenshaw

  • View profile for Chetana Kumar
    Chetana Kumar Chetana Kumar is an Influencer

    Converting sustainability metrics into actions for global leaders | Leading CSR and Special Projects at Fractal | Investor | Speaker | Mentor I Views personal unless stated otherwise

    8,181 followers

    After two decades of leading teams, I discovered that traditional to-do lists were holding back my productivity. Here's what I have found working well for me in 2025 - 'interstitial journaling'. Outlined by Tony Stubblebine, this approach is a unified workflow that combines note-taking, task management, and time tracking in one seamless system. Rather than saving all your journaling for the beginning or end of the day, interstitial journaling happens in the interstices (the spaces between tasks). After completing a task, take brief pauses to document three things ... 👉 the current time 👉 thoughts about what you just completed 👉 your next focused action I found this approach particularly valuable because it addresses a fundamental challenge in modern work - the constant context-switching that fragments our attention, particularly mine! And it also helps me course correct, cut back on 'guilt', and send myself positive reinforcement. Here's what I discovered works particularly well ... ➞ I record timestamps to track patterns in my peak performance hours ➞ I catch distractions and build greater self-awareness ➞ It makes breaks more mindful and purposeful ➞ It increases awareness of procrastination patterns and helps reduce them ➞ It creates a natural system for tracking well-being and focus throughout the day With January 10th this year, known as ‘Quitter's Day,’ when many people abandon their New Year's resolutions - this could be the simple yet powerful system you need to stay on track with your goals for 2025. I'm curious - what methods have you found effective for managing transitions between complex tasks? #Productivity #SelfAwareness #Journaling

  • View profile for Peter Sorgenfrei

    I coach founders through the stuff no one talks about on Slack. 57+ happy clients across 13 countries. 6x Founder/CEO. Author. AI Agency Partner. Creator of The Whole Human Approach.

    67,793 followers

    I used to be proud of my 80-hour work weeks. → Until I burned out completely. Here's what I learned about real success. The truth about work-life balance: It's not about equal time. It's about equal energy. Here's my framework: 1) Energy Management Track your peak performance hours Schedule deep work during high-energy Rest when you're low 2) The Boundary System No-phone zones at home Email-free weekends Protected family time 3) Time Multipliers Batch similar tasks Automate repetitive work Delegate what drains you 4) Life First Scheduling Book personal commitments first Protect exercise time Schedule daily recharge 5) Work Boundaries Define work hours clearly Set client expectations Learn to say no 6) Energy Boosters Regular movement breaks Healthy fuel choices Power naps when needed What changed when I implemented this framework? → Productivity up by 2x → Stress down 70% Remember: Success without fulfillment = The ultimate failure Work will take everything you give it, unless you set the rules. Start here: Audit your time Set clear boundaries Protect what matters Balance isn't perfect → But burnout is perfectly avoidable Your life = Your rules Rest = Productivity Boundaries = Freedom Share if you believe in sustainable success. Because remember: Nobody ever said on their deathbed "I wish I spent more time at the office." Start designing your ideal balance today.

  • View profile for Kat Wellum-Kent

    Founder & CEO of The Fractionals Group | Creator of Fractional Finance and Fractional Human Resources | Fractional CFO | Speaker | Multi Award Winner | Scaling Businesses With Fractional Expertise

    5,733 followers

    Fractional Improvement: Energy Management vs. Time Management This week, I'm shifting my focus from managing my calendar to managing my energy. We've all experienced those days: 8 productive hours fly by effortlessly, while on others, a simple task feels like climbing Everest. The difference isn't time—it's energy. Time is fixed at 24 hours daily, but energy fluctuates dramatically. By mapping my energy patterns instead of just blocking my calendar, I'm able to match tasks to my natural rhythms. What this looks like in practice: ⏲️Scheduling complex financial modeling and client strategy work during my morning peak (9-11am) when my analytical thinking is sharpest ⏲️Shifting admin tasks, emails, and routine reporting to mid-afternoon (2-4pm) when I naturally experience a cognitive dip ⏲️Taking a proper lunch break away from my desk to reset mentally before afternoon commitments ⏲️Planning "deep work" in 90-minute blocks rather than arbitrary time slots, aligning with our brain's natural focus cycles I've realized that I've been fighting my own biology by trying to perform equally well at all hours. Last week, I kept a diary to log my energy patterns and create a personal "heat map" of when I'm best suited for different types of work. The results are revealing: I'm completing complex tasks more efficiently, experiencing less mental fatigue, and—surprisingly—finding more creativity in those natural energy peaks. As a Founder with an endless to do list, working with your natural cycles rather than against them might be the most important optimization of all. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ✨ Fractional Improvement ✨ This is part of my weekly series highlighting one specific area I'm focusing on improving. Small, deliberate changes compound over time into significant growth. Have you noticed patterns in your own energy levels throughout the day? How do you align your most demanding work with your peak performance hours? #FractionalImprovement #ProductivityHacks #FractionalFinance #EnergyManagement

  • View profile for Mayowa Babalola, PhD

    Endowed Professor | Leadership & AI Ethics Expert | Keynote Speaker

    3,941 followers

    As an academic, I know how easy it is to feel pulled in a million directions. Between teaching, research, meetings, and deadlines, the distractions are endless. I struggled with this for the longest time until I discovered the power of deep, focused work. It changed everything. Now, instead of juggling tasks, I commit to structured, focused work sessions. Here’s what helped me, and it might just help you too: 1. Set Clear Priorities ↳ Know exactly what needs your attention before you start the day. For me, it’s the key research tasks that move the needle. 2. Time Block Your Tasks ↳ Allocate specific blocks of time for uninterrupted work. Teaching prep? 8-9 PM and 5-7 AM. Research? 1-3 PM. Editorial and industry engagement work? Fridays. No distractions. 3. Eliminate Distractions ↳ I turn off all notifications—emails, texts, you name it. A quiet workspace is the foundation of deep work. 4. Work in Sprints ↳ The Pomodoro Technique (25 minutes work, 5-minute breaks) has been a real game-changer. It keeps my energy and focus up all day. 5. Review and Adjust ↳ At the end of the day, I reflect on what worked and make tweaks for tomorrow. This small habit keeps me improving. If you’re feeling stretched thin, try making deep, focused work a priority this week. The results—both in productivity and peace of mind—will speak for themselves. Wishing you all a focused and productive week! #mondaybits #deepwork #FutureProofYourLeadership #focus #productivity

  • View profile for Amer Nizamuddin
    Amer Nizamuddin Amer Nizamuddin is an Influencer

    AI Strategy & Transformation Leader | C-Suite Exec Coach | Ex-President/COO/CDO | Building Future-Ready Leadership, Upskilling Students, Businesses & Leaders for the AI-Driven Future | Business & Operations Strategy |

    11,126 followers

    🔍 Ever feel lost in a sea of tasks? I did, until I discovered the Pomodoro Technique. It's a simple yet powerful way to enhance focus and productivity, one that I've personally found transformative. Here's how I've been using it to sharpen my focus. I start by setting a timer for 25 minutes, dedicating this time solely to work, followed by a 5-minute break. These intervals, called "Pomodoros," are short enough to maintain high levels of concentration and long enough to make significant progress on tasks. What surprised me was not just the improvement in my work quality, but also in my well-being. The scheduled breaks kept me refreshed and less prone to burnout. Plus, the sense of accomplishment after completing each Pomodoro was incredibly motivating. One of the key benefits I noticed was how it helped me break down large projects into manageable chunks. This made daunting tasks feel more approachable and reduced my inclination to procrastinate. Another unexpected advantage was the boost in my time management skills. By being more aware of how I was spending my minutes, I became more efficient in other areas of my life too. Critically, the Pomodoro Technique taught me the value of single tasking over multitasking. The focus on one task at a time led to higher quality work and less stress. Adopting this method has not only improved my productivity but also my approach to work and life. It's a testament to the power of simple changes leading to significant impacts. For anyone struggling with focus or productivity, I highly recommend giving the Pomodoro Technique a try. It might just be the significant change you're looking for. 🌟 I'm Amer Nizamuddin, sharing thoughts on leadership, career growth, and more. Stay connected for narratives that inspire change and community. Follow #amersnotes for continued insights. #LIPostingChallengeIndia #LinkedInNewsIndia #productivity #pomodorotechnique #timemanagement 

  • The most underrated productivity hack isn’t what you do it’s when you do it. Here’s a simple framework to align your schedule with your biology and get more done with less effort. First, forget the to do list start with a when to do list. Because research shows that we don’t feel or perform the same throughout the day. We move through a predictable pattern: Peak → Trough → Recovery And lining up your task to match that pattern is a game-changer. During the PEAK (usually mornings for 80% of people), your brain is most vigilant. It’s the best time for: Writing Data analysis Strategic thinking Any work that requires brainpower and precision. During the TROUGH (early to mid afternoon), your energy dips. Mistakes go up and productivity nose dives. It’s the best time for: Routine email Scheduling Admin work This is the time to take it easy by design. During the RECOVERY (late afternoon into early evening), your mood improves, but your focus is looser. That looseness makes this the best time for: Problem solving Creative work Conversations What if you're a night owl? Good news: you still have a pattern it’s just shifted later. Peak focus might hit at 6PM. Creative bursts might arrive at midnight. This isn’t about working harder. It’s about working smarter on your body’s schedule. If you know your when, you’ll get better at your what.

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